Monday, December 09, 2013

{MovieMonday} {Review} {Giveaway} Now You See Me


So I thought why wait until Jan to post this one!  I have an extra code to this movie.
  It was one of my favs of 2013 and I'm sure you will all feel the same! 


Four gifted street magicians—J. Daniel Atlas, Henley Reeves, Jack Wilder, and Merritt McKinney—are brought together by an unknown benefactor and, one year later, perform in Las Vegas as "The Four Horsemen," sponsored by insurance magnate Arthur Tressler. For the finale, a member of the audience is invited to help them in their next trick: robbing a bank. That audience member is Étienne Forcier, an account holder at the Crédit Républicain de Paris. Forcier is apparently teleported to his bank in Paris, where he activates an air-duct that vacuums up the money and showers it onto the crowd in Las Vegas.

This giveaway is open to everyone! This is for a digital code that can be used with iTunes, UltraViolet etc.  It will be a one time use for the movie Now You See Me.

I loved this movie! It keeps you on your toes and you never know what is going to happen!


a Rafflecopter giveaway

{Review} Stick Dog Wants A Hot Dog #TomWatson @HarperCollinsCh

Stick Dog Wants a Hot Dog
In Stick Dog Wants a Hot Dog, Tom Watson's hilarious sequel to Stick Dog, Stick Dog returns with the same crew of friends, and they're hungrier than ever. As the dogs embark on their quest for hot dogs, they learn they're not the only ones on a mission—a band of raccoons are following close behind, and they're ravenous, too!

In this second book, Stick Dog and his four friends, Poo-Poo, Mutt, Stripes, and Karen, must execute a master plan for stealing hot dogs. The closer they get to the hot dog vendor, the more difficult their mission becomes. With the same hilarious antics, the five dogs are met with many challenges along the way, including having to distract the frankfurter guy and Karen getting locked in a human's house. No matter what, these dogs have their eyes—and stomachs—on the prize.

5 Stars
My 9 year old daughter loved this book so much she asked if I could donate it to her class.  Which we did.  She loved that the book was written on lined paper like the Dork Daries and others of its kind.  Which made it very easy to follow.  We believe that this will deff. help out kids that have reading issues.  As it makes sure that they don't loose their spot.  Even though this is a book two you won't be lost in the story.  The author takes the time to introduce you to the characters and why he draws stick dog the way he does.  As well as talking and explaining about his friends.  This was a very cute and entertaining read and will appeal to the boy crowed as much as the girls.

"*I received a copy of this book for free to review, this in no way influenced my review, all opinions are 100% honest and my own."




Disclaimer: Thanks to Goodreads and Amazon for the book cover, about the book, and author information.

{Review} Kat McGee and the School of Christmas Spirit @NovelNibble @intogethermedia

Kat McGee and The School of Christmas Spirit
If Kat McGee had one Christmas wish, she'd wish to be special. Instead, she's the boring middle in a family packed with sparkly siblings, including three sisters who have all starred as Mary in Totsville, Maine's annual big-deal Christmas Pageant. All Kat's done is wet her pants on a rollercoaster and earn herself the horrible nickname, "Kat McPee." When she doesn't get the part of Mary, Kat's convinced that Christmas will be just another Kat McPee failure. But then Kat's beloved Gram lets it slip that she went to school with Mrs. Claus. The Mrs. Claus. Before Kat knows it, a magical snowglobe whisks her away to the North Pole, where she makes friends, checks naughty and nice lists, and takes classes in cookie baking, reindeer training, and toy designing. It's a Christmas miracle... But something is wrong. The North Pole is being threatened, and only Kat McGee can help. Kat McGee and The School of Christmas Spirit is about a modern girl in a magical adventure. Kat is about to learn who you can be if you believe in Christmas... and yourself.

Biography

Rebecca Munsterer is the author of Novel Nibble, a website dedicated to short and sweet writing. Her two books, Mrs. Claus and The School of Christmas Spririt, and The Little Rippers, were both written during the summer. To find inspiration to write about the winter in July, she drank hot chocolate instead of lemonade.

Ms. Munsterer received a bachelor's degree in writing from Colby College and a MALS degree in creative writing from Dartmouth.

She lives in Norwich, Vermont with her lazy labrador retriever and an array of wild animals who howl in the middle of the night.





5 Stars
This book was adorable!  From the drawn pictures throughout to the Reading guide which goes per chapter with Vocab words and Discussion questions.  This is a great read for kids who know how and are having issues answering questions when the book is over.  My 9 year old found this book very helpful in that regard.  Within this Readers Guide are activities as well. Another great thing in this book is the CandyFruit Recipe at the Back of the book created by Celebrity Chef Tom Colicchio and Umber Ahmad's Mah-Ze-Dahr Bakery. Having this celebrity chef create the recipe for all of the Kat McGee Adventures is such an amazing thing, and the publisher and author are very excited to let everyone know! 


"*I received a copy of this book for free to review, this in no way influenced my review, all opinions are 100% honest and my own."
Disclaimer: Thanks to Goodreads and Amazon for the book cover, about the book, and author information.

Sunday, December 08, 2013

{Blast} Silver-White @shawnunder

 
Silver-White by Shawn Underhill “The woods are lovely, dark, and deep, But I have promises to keep, And miles to go before I sleep.” ~ Robert Frost *Evie’s family has been holding out on her … Big time. On an unexpected visit to her grandparents’ house in New Hampshire’s secluded North Woods, the sixteen-year-old literally runs into the truth of the long-hidden family secrets, and finds herself thrust without warning into the clandestine world of the Great North Pack—a wild and exhilarating world of rugged beauty, heart-pounding adventures, and long nights running under a sea of stars … but as she’s set to discover, a world also fraught with potential dangers lurking in the shadows. Praise "Simply put, this book was amazing. I've read more fantasy novels than I can count, but this one is certainly one of the best. The heroine isn't some wishy-washy pansy that screams at everything, and the focus of the story isn't on some unbelievably beautiful teenage girl who suddenly becomes the biggest, baddest member of her species falling in love with some big, bad, sexy member of her newfound species. It's about a girl becoming something she never knew existed, finding her place within the pack family she values more than ever before, and an age-old feud that threatens everything she loves." ~Morgan
Purchase ~ just .99 cents
Author Shawn Underhill Shawn is a part-time writer from New Hampshire, where he spends his free time hiking in the mountains, camping, racing dirt bikes, or anything else that keeps him outdoors. Dogs are his very favorite people. He is also the author of the novel All Things Different.
BookBlast $100 Giveaway $100 Amazon Gift Card or Paypal Cash Ends 12/31/13 Open only to those who can legally enter, receive and use an Amazon.com Gift Code or Paypal Cash. Winning Entry will be verified prior to prize being awarded. No purchase necessary. You must be 18 or older to enter or have your parent enter for you. The winner will be chosen by rafflecopter and announced here as well as emailed and will have 48 hours to respond or a new winner will be chosen. This giveaway is in no way associated with Facebook, Twitter, Rafflecopter or any other entity unless otherwise specified. The number of eligible entries received determines the odds of winning. Giveaway was organized by Kathy from I Am A Reader, Not A Writer and sponsored by the author. VOID WHERE PROHIBITED BY LAW. a Rafflecopter giveaway

4Blogoversary {Giveaway} @harperteen @DisneyHyperion @hollyblack @marthawells1 @kathleenpeacock @megcabot @sherrythomas

Photo: ITS COMING! My site will be 4 years old this Dec. 1st!  So what am I giving away?! Non other than 29 Print ARCS in 4 weeks of giveaways! So make sure you check out the site Dec. 1st for the first weeks post!
My 4th Blogoversary!


Welcome to the 2nd week of the 4 week giveaway!  This week we have these 7 wonderful ARCs


Emilie and the Hollow WorldFallen Angel (Fallen Angel, #1)Doll BonesThe Burning Sky (The Elemental Trilogy, #1)Mercy (Mercy, #1)Abandon (Abandon Trilogy, #1)Thornhill (Hemlock, #2)
a Rafflecopter giveaway

Saturday, December 07, 2013

{Review} {Excerpt} Racing Savannah

Racing Savannah
They’re from two different worlds.

He lives in the estate house, and she spends most of her time in the stables helping her father train horses. In fact, Savannah has always been much more comfortable around horses than boys. Especially boys like Jack Goodwin—cocky, popular and completely out of her league. She knows the rules: no mixing between the staff and the Goodwin family. But Jack has no such boundaries.

With her dream of becoming a horse jockey, Savannah isn’t exactly one to follow the rules either. She’s not going to let someone tell her a girl isn’t tough enough to race. Sure, it’s dangerous. Then again, so is dating Jack…

5 STARS
This is a quick, romantic read stocked with a lot of fun equestrian details. The book is at its best when dishing on jockey secrets, and touring fancy barns larger than your average big box store. 
Thanks to the publisher for sending this copy!

Chapter 1

Roots and Beginnings
Welcome to Hell would be a more appropriate sign, considering Dad just uprooted me from West Virginia and hauled me to Tennessee right before senior year.Welcome to Cedar Hill Farms of Franklin, Tennessee. Est. 1854. John C. Goodwin III, Owner
Dad impressed Mr. Goodwin at a race earlier this year, so he got hired on as head groom. That’s why we moved here two days ago—Dad couldn’t give up this opportunity to work at a fancy farm that trains horses for the Kentucky Derby and Breeders’ Cup, and I didn’t want to be the evil daughter who stamped her foot and refused to come.
It doesn’t totally matter, because home is where my dad is. But it still sucks that I had to leave my part-time job exercising horses.  It would’ve become a full-time position when I graduated from high school, and now I have to start all over again.
I punch the code into the alarm box, the heavenly white gates swing open, and I steel myself for the half-mile trek to Hillcrest, the staff quarters. My claustrophobic new home. Hillcrest is attached to the gargantuan white manor house, where a smattering of comfy rocking chairs dot the wraparound porch, waiting for someone to sit down.
Back in West Virginia, it was just me and Dad and She Who Must Not Be Named living in our trailer. Now we’re sharing quarters with six other staff members and their kids. To escape I took a walk to downtown Franklin this morning, but I’m cash poor at the moment so there wasn’t much to do besides loiter, and the last thing I need before school starts is to gain a reputation as that weird girl who loiters.
So here I am, back in hell, gathering my courage to go talk to the lead trainer about getting some work as an exercise rider, so I can cease being cash poor. I used to exercise racehorses at the track and casino in Charles Town. But that was at a totally different level—the horses I rode there were like driving a Ford and here they are like Ferraris. Hell, the Queen of England houses her horses thirty minutes away.
What if the trainer thinks I’m unqualified? Or a hack? I’ve been riding since I was four, but still. Just go talk to him, Savannah! The worst he can say is no… and then I can go back to loitering. I inhale, then let out the deep breath I’ve been holding and take in the scent of cornbread, fresh laundry, dirt, cedar trees, and of course, horseshit.
I can do this.
I charge down the driveway and suddenly a wailing, high-pitched alarm goes off. My first thought is: Tornado! But the skies are as blue as a robin’s egg. Seconds later I see a brown and white blur streaking across the grass. A racer. Two guys on ponies are chasing it. He must have escaped!
I sprint toward the horse as he zigzags my way. The horse seems curious. But not curious enough to slow down. He zips past me as I yell, “Stop!” and take off after him. The horse circles back around. I hold a hand up. “Whoa, there.”
The horse slows to a jog, studying me, his expression both wary and nosy. Then he charges me. I reach out and snatch his bridle. With a firm grip I thrust him away from me, showing him who’s boss. That’s when I discover he’s wearing a saddle.
“Did you throw your rider?” Suddenly he rears up and kicks his feet. When he returns to all fours, I get up in his face again. “Whoa!” He cowers, bowing his head.
One time a horseman told me I have a way with horses. Dad told me not to listen when men say things like that, because they’re just trying to get into my pants. But I do have a way with horses. Dad, however, does not have a way with words.
I confirm the horse is a boy, then gently slap his neck, checking the engraving on his bridle. His name is Tennessee Star.
“You sure are fast,” I tell the young horse, petting his nose. He’s beautiful—a light brown chestnut with white markings. A Ferrari. I never rode such a well-made colt in Charles Town.
Then, from the fields beyond the manor house, a guy comes riding up on a horse. I don’t take my eyes off that rider, even when Tennessee Star tries to yank away.
I haven’t met the owner’s son yet, but I’ve seen him riding around like he’s king of the place. Which is technically his title, I guess. When we arrived two days ago, Mr. Goodwin’s chief of staff told me the Goodwin family is fiercely private, and that non-housekeeping staff aren’t allowed inside the manor. We were instructed to keep our distance from the Goodwins. Since I don’t want Dad to get fired on Day 3, I haven’t spoken to the boy.
Still, he’s beautiful: I should start a magazine called GQ Cowboy, and he could be the cover model every month. Wavy hair the color of straw is just long enough to show out from under the brim of his cowboy hat. His snowy white button-down shirt is spotless and pressed, tucked into his jeans, the arms rolled up to his elbows. The three coonhounds that always seem to follow him around bound up and sniff my jeans.
Last night a giggling maid told me his name: Jack Goodwin, and he’s 17, like me. He attends Hundred Oaks High, the school I’m starting on Monday.
“Star!” Jack says, dismounting fluidly. “You’re too smart, you know that?” he scolds the horse, then grabs the bridle as I let go. Two farmhands jog up on ponies and Jack wordlessly hands Star off to one of them, slapping the horse’s flank before they lead him away.
“If I didn’t love that horse so much I’d send him to drag a tourist carriage in New York City,” Jack says in a deep Tennessee drawl. “That’d teach him not to buck his rider and run off.”
Once he confirms he has a good grasp on his stallion’s reins, Jack turns to me. His blue eyes widen and a bright smile spreads across his face.
“Thanks for catching Star. That was insane how you cornered him with no corner. I’ve never seen anything like it.”
“No problem.”
“So what can I do you for?” He tips his cowboy hat in an exaggerated manner, and smiles again, revealing perfectly straight white teeth. Behind closed lips I run my tongue over my slightly crooked front ones. “You’re a bit late for the tour. They’re at 8:00 and it’s nearly noon now.”
He thinks I’m here for the tour?
“No, no,” I say, starting to explain, but then he unleashes his megawatt smile. It makes my throat close up and my heart pounds even harder. This guy is hot, but I don’t like boys who get whatever they want without trying. I worked damned hard to get my part-time exercise rider job back in Charles Town. Just like I’ll work damned hard to get a position here.
“Soo…” Jack says, stroking the bay stallion’s mane. “Do you want a private tour? You know, to say thanks for catching my horse?”
A private tour? Like, me and Jack alone? Dad would kill me for breaking the Goodwins’ privacy rules. Not to mention hanging around people like Jack is against everything I believe in.
“I’m not here for a tour. I—”
“I didn’t know Mom was hosting guests this weekend,” Jack says. “I hope she’s not having another fashion show for charity, because I barely survived the last one.”
“We haven’t met.”
He thrusts a hand out, grinning. “I know. I’d have remembered you. I’m Jack Goodwin.”
To be continued….

{Review} {Giveaway} Follow the Yarn @CompostHero

Follow the Yarn: The Knitting Wit & Wisdom of Ann Sokolowski
Sometimes you don’t know what your story is until you start to tell it. When my teacher, Ann Sokolowski, passed away suddenly nine months into my beginner knitting class, followed by my dad and then my mother, one after the other, the book I was planning to write - a lighthearted collection of Ann’s knitting tips and techniques - turned into something much deeper. As I followed the yarn where it led me, I discovered the ways in which my life was intertwined with Ann’s, and, in the process, I began to uncover my own true story. 

"Tattoo this on your eyelids! This book is really really good. It’s got everything going for it; funny stories, heart warming anecdotes, awesome information about how to take care of your knits, and a mass of other little facts and details that range from interesting to ‘ohmergawd how did I not know this???” It gets an A+ from me!" Theo DeAndrea, Daydreamknits.

Read it for the knitting tips, and to be intrigued by a remarkable woman. Marvel at the power of universal life lessons clothed in the most unassuming of guises: a knitting book. Read it to gain the tools and the courage to discover your own story.
Reba LinkerSometimes you don’t know what your story is until you start to tell it. When I wrote Follow the Yarn, as I followed where the story led me, I unraveled the mystery of why my inner voice insisted I write about Ann, my knitting teacher. I discovered the many ways in which my life was intertwined with Ann’s, and, in the process, uncovered my own true voice.

My first book was The Compost Heroes, about which folksinger Pete Seeger wrote: “If there is still a world here in 2011 it will be billions of little things that will save us. Thanks, Ms. Linker!” As a storyteller I love bringing children the message of caring for our planet. 




4Stars
A very interesting book with a twist.  Not only does it tell a story but it also gives you information about knitting.  


"*I received a copy of this book for free to review, this in no way influenced my review, all opinions are 100% honest and my own."
Disclaimer: Thanks to Goodreads and Amazon for the book cover, about the book, and author information.
a Rafflecopter giveaway